First thing I'd try is to go into the BIOS, and turn off all the power 
saving settings...by doing that, you don't have to worry about the PC 
ignoring the OS APM settings, or lack thereof.

Also, set your clock in the BIOS setup, too...unlike DOS/Windows, I've 
found that programs that update Linux' clock don't actually set the CMOS 
clock for you, so that rebooting usually requires resetting the clock.

On Thu, 2 Nov 2000, Peter Kiem wrote:

> Got a problem that even though I have taken out APMD using NTSYSV so it is 
> not running, the BIOS is probably putting the computer to sleep automatically.
> 
> Now when it comes back it reapplies the GMT time difference and my PC jumps 
> ahead 10 hours!!
> 
> I've searched through the moongroup archives and can't find a fix for it.
> 
> System is running a Red Hat 7.0 build
> 
> contents of /etc/sysconfig/clock
> ZONE="Australia/Brisbane"
> UTC=false
> ARC=false
> 
> Maybe I'll just have disable the APM features in the BIOS but I really want 
> to know what's happening here.



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